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Aid reaches drought-ravaged Somalia
by Staff Writers
Nairobi (AFP) July 24, 2011

The International Red Cross said Sunday it had handed out 400 tonnes of food in drought-hit parts of rebel-held southern Somalia as the UN prepares to host emergency talks on the crisis in the region.

"The distribution look place in the Bardera district and passed without incident, with the knowledge of the authorities and the recipients," ICRC spokesman Yves Van Loo told AFP in Nairobi.

It is the first ICRC-led food drop direct to locals in Shebab-controlled zones since 2009, he said, adding that further food drops will take place in the coming days.

Gedo province lies next to southern Bakool and Lower Shabelle, the two areas the United Nations declared this week as the worst hit by famine.

UN officials say that over the past few months, tens of thousands of people have already been killed by the worst drought in 60 years.

It has wrought havoc in war-torn Somalia but has also hit more widely in parts of Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan and Uganda. Across the Horn of Africa, UN officials fear that 12 million people face starvation.

International aid agencies are scrambling to find ways to deliver food supplies to those living in the epicentre, parts of Somalia controlled by the Al Qaeda-inspired Islamist group Shebab.

The ICRC said it had distributed 400 tonnes of food supplies, including oil, rice and beans, to about 4,000 families or about 24,000 people in Gedo province on Saturday.

United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon has called on donor countries to come up with $1.6 billion (1.1 billion euros) in aid for the two regions.

And on Monday, the UN food agency the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) will host emergency talks on the crisis in Rome.

"This is an emergency ministerial meeting that is prompted by the escalation of the famine," said Cristina Amaral, head of emergency operations in Africa for the FAO.

"We're afraid that things will get worse in the coming months if nothing is done now."

Among those expected to attend are ministers from Djibouti, South Sudan, Sudan and Uganda, the head of the World Food Programme Josette Sheeran and Oxfam chief executive Barbara Stocking.

The World Food programme was forced to leave southern Somalia last year following a series of curbs and threats from the Shebab.

The militants this month said foreign aid groups could return to the area but on Friday a Shebab spokesman said the ban was still in place.

The Shebab, designated a terrorist group by the United States, have waged a bloody campaign to overthrow the country's Western-backed government.

But EU aid commissioner Kristalina Georgieva said Sunday she was hopeful that, with the help of local communities, humanitarian assistance would still get through.

"In Somalia, there are places where local communities are welcoming humanitarian aid," the commissioner said.

"Even in areas of the Shebab at the end of the day it is the local people who can say enough is enough," she added.

On Saturday she visited Dadaab, the world's largest refugee complex, across the border in Kenya.

"I was here to announce major new funding for the Horn of Africa crisis," she wrote in her blog at the European Commission website.

"Within a few weeks from now I fervently hope that the European Commissions contribution this year will have leapt to 160 million euros."

"I was humbled by the indomitable spirit of these fugitives from famine," she added.

"I met a visibly exhausted young couple who had walked for days with their eight children -- the youngest just three months old...," who were now getting the help they needed, she wrote.

"They were just one family among 20,000 gathered on the outskirts of the camp," she added.

Refugees from Somalia continue to stream daily into the camp in eastern Kenya, a vast and overcrowded complex sheltering some 380,000 people.

Experts say the effects of two failed rainy seasons in the region have been exacerbated by the rapid rise in the costs of fuel and food.

These factors, together with the conflict in Somalia, have forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes.

Long-term solutions for the crisis -- such as assistance to livestock farmers and the introduction of more drought-resistant crops -- are also set to be discussed at Monday's meeting in Rome.




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East Africa drought in numbers
Nairobi (AFP) July 24, 2011 - Drought in the Horn of Africa is affecting some 12 million people, the most severe food security crisis in Africa since the 1991-1992 Somalia famine.

Here are some facts and figures on the scale of the crisis, according to UN and aid agency sources.

-- The worst drought for decades has struck Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Djibouti. Secretive Eritrea is also believed to be affected.

-- 2.23 million: the number of children estimated to be acutely malnourished in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia alone.

-- Tens of thousands are estimated to have died.

-- 720,000: the number of children at risk of death without urgent assistance.

-- Up to 350,000 people affected in Somalia's two famine-struck areas of southern Bakool and Lower Shabelle regions, with fears famine could spread to all eight regions of southern Somalia.

-- Nearly half of Somalia's estimated 10 million people are facing a food crisis.

-- One-quarter of war-torn Somalia's entire population is displaced.

-- 50 percent: the rates of malnutrition in some parts of Somalia, the highest in the world.

-- Two-years: the length of an ongoing aid ban by Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab rebels who control famine-struck areas.

-- $1.6 billion: the amount UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has urged donor countries to come up with in aid to combat the crisis.

-- Up to 90 percent of livestock upon which people depend has died in some areas.

-- 1,295: the number of Somali refugees arriving every day at Kenya's Dadaab camp in recent weeks. The Dadaab complex now hosts more than four times its initial capacity of 90,000 when it was set up in 1991.

-- Famine is declared when at least 20 percent of households face extreme food shortages, acute malnutrition in over 30 percent of people, and two deaths per 10,000 people every day.





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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Somali relief in rebel-held areas raises challenges
Nairobi (AFP) July 22, 2011
Relief efforts are being ramped up for two famine-struck regions of Somalia controlled by a US-designated terrorist group, but there are deep concerns as to the implications of dealing with them. With the Al-Qaeda-inspired Shebab maintaining a ban on several foreign aid groups - despite saying earlier this month they had lifted restrictions - key UN and international agencies will be likel ... read more


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